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Crux

Crux (/krʌks/) is a constellation of the southern sky that is centred on four bright stars in a cross-shaped asterism commonly known as the Southern Cross. It lies on the southern end of the Milky Way's visible band. The name Crux is Latin for cross. Even though it is the smallest of all 88 modern constellations, Crux is among the most easily distinguished as its four main stars each have an apparent visual magnitude brighter than +2.8. It has attained a high level of cultural significance in many Southern Hemisphere states and nations.

Crux
Constellation
AbbreviationCru
GenitiveCrucis
Pronunciation/krʌks/, genitive /ˈkrsɪs/
SymbolismSouthern Cross
Right ascension12.5h
Declination−60°
QuadrantSQ3
Area68 sq. deg. (88th)
Main stars4
Bayer/Flamsteed
stars
19
Stars with planets2
Stars brighter than 3.00m5
Stars within 10.00 pc (32.62 ly)0
Brightest starAcrux (α Cru) (0.87m)
Messier objects0
Meteor showersCrucids
Bordering
constellations
Centaurus
Musca
Visible at latitudes between +20° and −90°.
Best visible at 21:00 (9 p.m.) during the month of May.

Blue-white α Crucis (Acrux) is the most southerly member of the constellation and, at magnitude 0.8, the brightest. The three other stars of the cross appear clockwise and in order of lessening magnitude: β Crucis (Mimosa), γ Crucis (Gacrux), and δ Crucis (Imai). ε Crucis (Ginan) also lies within the cross asterism. Many of these brighter stars are members of the Scorpius–Centaurus association, a large but loose group of hot blue-white stars that appear to share common origins and motion across the southern Milky Way.

Crux contains four Cepheid variables, each visible to the naked eye under optimum conditions. Crux also contains the bright and colourful open cluster known as the Jewel Box (NGC 4755) on its eastern border. Nearby to the southeast is a large dark nebula spanning 7° by 5° known as the Coalsack Nebula, portions of which are mapped in the neighbouring constellations of Centaurus and Musca.

History edit

The bright stars in Crux were known to the Ancient Greeks, where Ptolemy regarded them as part of the constellation Centaurus.[1][2] They were entirely visible as far north as Britain in the fourth millennium BC. However, the precession of the equinoxes gradually lowered the stars below the European horizon, and they were eventually forgotten by the inhabitants of northern latitudes.[3] By 400 AD, the stars in the constellation now called Crux never rose above the horizon throughout most of Europe. Dante may have known about the constellation in the 14th century, as he describes an asterism of four bright stars in the southern sky in his Divine Comedy.[4][5] His description, however, may be allegorical, and the similarity to the constellation a coincidence.[6]

 
Depiction of the Crux by João Faras in May 1500

The 15th century Venetian navigator Alvise Cadamosto made note of what was probably the Southern Cross on exiting the Gambia River in 1455, calling it the carro dell'ostro ("southern chariot"). However, Cadamosto's accompanying diagram was inaccurate.[7][8] Historians generally credit João Faras[a] for being the first European to depict it correctly. Faras sketched and described the constellation (calling it "las guardas") in a letter written on the beaches of Brazil on 1 May 1500 to the Portuguese monarch.[9][10]

Explorer Amerigo Vespucci seems to have observed not only the Southern Cross but also the neighboring Coalsack Nebula on his second voyage in 1501–1502.[11]

Another early modern description clearly describing Crux as a separate constellation is attributed to Andrea Corsali, an Italian navigator who from 1515–1517 sailed to China and the East Indies in an expedition sponsored by King Manuel I. In 1516, Corsali wrote a letter to the monarch describing his observations of the southern sky, which included a rather crude map of the stars around the south celestial pole including the Southern Cross and the two Magellanic Clouds seen in an external orientation, as on a globe.[12][13]

Emery Molyneux and Petrus Plancius have also been cited as the first uranographers (sky mappers) to distinguish Crux as a separate constellation; their representations date from 1592, the former depicting it on his celestial globe and the latter in one of the small celestial maps on his large wall map. Both authors, however, depended on unreliable sources and placed Crux in the wrong position. Crux was first shown in its correct position on the celestial globes of Petrus Plancius and Jodocus Hondius in 1598 and 1600. Its stars were first catalogued separately from Centaurus by Frederick de Houtman in 1603.[14] The constellation was later adopted by Jakob Bartsch in 1624 and Augustin Royer in 1679. Royer is sometimes wrongly cited as initially distinguishing Crux.[2]

Characteristics edit

 
Southern Cross from New Zealand

Crux is bordered by the constellations Centaurus (which surrounds it on three sides) on the east, north and west, and Musca to the south. Covering 68 square degrees and 0.165% of the night sky, it is the smallest of the 88 constellations.[15] The three-letter abbreviation for the constellation, as adopted by the International Astronomical Union in 1922, is "Cru".[16] The official constellation boundaries, as set by Belgian astronomer Eugène Delporte in 1930, are defined by a polygon of four segments. In the equatorial coordinate system, the right ascension coordinates of these borders lie between 11h 56.13m and 12h 57.45m , while the declination coordinates are between −55.68° and −64.70°.[17] Its totality figures at least part of the year south of the 25th parallel north.[18][b]

In tropical regions Crux can be seen in the sky from April to June. Crux is exactly opposite to Cassiopeia on the celestial sphere, and therefore it cannot appear in the sky with the latter at the same time. In this era, south of Cape Town, Adelaide, and Buenos Aires (the 34th parallel south), Crux is circumpolar and thus always appears in the sky.

Crux is sometimes confused with the nearby False Cross asterism by stargazers. The False Cross consists of stars in Carina and Vela, is larger and dimmer, does not have a fifth star, and lacks the two prominent nearby "Pointer Stars". Between the two is the even larger and dimmer Diamond Cross.

Visibility edit

 
Deep exposure of Crux, Coalsack Nebula, and IC 2944

Crux is easily visible from the southern hemisphere, south of 35th parallel at practically any time of year as circumpolar. It is also visible near the horizon from tropical latitudes of the northern hemisphere for a few hours every night during the northern winter and spring. For instance, it is visible from Cancun or any other place at latitude 25° N or less at around 10 pm at the end of April.[19][20] There are 5 main stars. Due to precession, Crux will move closer to the South Pole in the next millennia, up to 67 degrees south declination for the middle of the constellation. However, by the year 14,000 Crux will be visible for most parts of Europe and continental United States which will extend to North Europe by the year 18,000 as it will be less than 30 degrees south declination.

Use in navigation edit

 
Locating the south celestial pole

In the Southern Hemisphere, the Southern Cross is frequently used for navigation in much the same way that Polaris is used in the Northern Hemisphere. Projecting a line from γ to α Crucis (the foot of the crucifix) approximately 4+12 times beyond gives a point close to the Southern Celestial Pole[3] which is also, coincidentally, where intersects a perpendicular line taken southwards from the east-west axis of Alpha Centauri to Beta Centauri, which are stars at an alike declination to Crux and of a similar width as the cross, but higher magnitude.[21] Argentine gauchos are documented as using Crux for night orientation in the Pampas and Patagonia.

Alpha and Beta Centauri are of similar declinations (thus distance from the pole) and are often referred as the "Southern Pointers" or just "The Pointers", allowing people to easily identify the Southern Cross, the constellation of Crux. Very few bright stars lie between Crux and the pole itself, although the constellation Musca is fairly easily recognised immediately south of Crux.[21]

Bright stars edit

Down to apparent magnitude +2.5 are 92 stars that shine the brightest as viewed from the Earth. Three of these stars are in Crux making it the most densely populated as to those stars (this being 3.26% of these 92 stars, and in turn being 19.2 times more than the expected 0.17% that would result on a homogenous distribution of all bright stars and a randomised drawing of all 88 constellations, given its area, 0.17% of the sky).

Features edit

Stars edit

 
The constellation Crux as it can be seen by the naked eye
 
Crux with clouds, from Cape Town

Within the constellation's borders, there are 49 stars brighter than or equal to apparent magnitude 6.5.[c][18] The four main stars that form the asterism are Alpha, Beta, Gamma, and Delta Crucis.

  • α Crucis or Acrux is a triple star 321 light-years from Earth. A rich blue in colour, with a visual magnitude 0.8 to the unaided eye, it has two close components of a similar magnitude, 1.3 and 1.8 respectively, plus another much wider component of the 5th magnitude. The two close components are resolved in a small amateur telescope and the wide component is readily visible in a pair of binoculars.
  • β Crucis or Mimosa is a blue-hued giant star of magnitude 1.3, and lies 353 light-years from Earth. It is a Beta Cephei-type variable star with a variation of less than 0.1 magnitudes.[3]
  • γ Crucis or Gacrux is an optical double star. The primary is a red-hued giant star of magnitude 1.6, 88 light-years from Earth, and is one of the closest red giants to Earth. Its secondary component is magnitude 6.5, 264 light-years from Earth.
  • δ Crucis (Imai) is a magnitude 2.8 blue-white hued star about 345 light-years from Earth.[3] Like Mimosa it is a Beta Cepheid variable.[15]

There is also a fifth star, that is often included with the Southern Cross.

  • ε Crucis (Ginan) is an orange-hued giant star of magnitude 3.6, 228 light-years from Earth.

There are several other naked-eye stars within the borders of Crux, especially:

  • Iota Crucis is a visual double star 125 light-years from Earth. The primary is an orange-hued giant of magnitude 4.6 and the secondary at magnitude 9.5.
  • Mu Crucis or Mu1,2 Crucis is a wide double star where the components are about 370 light-years from Earth. Equally blue-white in colour, the components are magnitude 4.0 and 5.1 respectively, and are easily divisible in small amateur telescopes or large binoculars.[3]

Scorpius–Centaurus association edit

Unusually, a total of 15 of the 23 brightest stars in Crux are spectrally blue-white B-type stars.[15] Among the five main bright stars, Delta, and probably Alpha and Beta, are likely co-moving B-type members of the Scorpius–Centaurus association, the nearest OB association to the Sun.[23][24] They are among the highest-mass stellar members of the Lower Centaurus–Crux subgroup of the association, with ages of roughly 10 to 20 million years.[25][26] Other members include the blue-white stars Zeta, Lambda and both the components of the visual double star, Mu.[27]

Variable stars edit

Crux contains many variable stars. It boasts four Cepheid variables that may all reach naked eye visibility.

Other well studied variable stars includes:

  • Lambda Crucis and Theta2 Crucis, that are both Beta Cepheid type variable stars.[15]
  • BH Crucis, also known as Welch's Red Variable, is a Mira variable that ranges from magnitude 6.6 to 9.8 over 530 days.[32] Discovered in October 1969, it has become redder and brighter (mean magnitude changing from 8.047 to 7.762) and its period lengthened by 25% in the first thirty years since its discovery.[33]

Host star exoplanets in Crux edit

The star HD 106906 has been found to have a planet—HD 106906 b—that has one of the widest orbits of any currently known planetary-mass companions.[34]

Objects beyond the Local Arm edit

Crux is backlit by the multitude of stars of the Scutum-Crux Arm (more commonly called the Scutum-Centaurus Arm) of the Milky Way. This is the main inner arm in the local radial quarter of the galaxy. Part-obscuring this is:

  • The Coalsack Nebula lies partially within Crux and partly in the neighboring constellations of Musca and Centaurus.[3] It is the most prominent dark nebula in the skies, and is easily visible to the naked eye as a prominent dark patch in the southern Milky Way. It can be found 6.5° southeast from the centre of Crux or 3° east from α Crucis. Its large area covers about 7° by 5°, and is 180 parsecs (590 ly) away from Earth.[35]

A key feature of the Scutum-Crux Arm is:

  • The Jewel Box, κ Crucis Cluster or NGC 4755, is a small but bright open cluster that appears as a fuzzy star to the naked eye and is very close to the easternmost boundary of Crux: about 1° southeast of Beta Crucis. The combined or total magnitude is 4.2 and it lies at a distance of 1.95 kiloparsecs (6,400 ly) from Earth.[3] The cluster was given its name by John Herschel,[3] based on the range of colours visible throughout the star cluster in his telescope. About seven million years old,[36] it is one of the youngest open clusters in the Milky Way, and it appears to have the shape of a letter 'A'. The Jewel Box Cluster is classified as Shapley class 'g' and Trumpler class 'I 3 r -' cluster; it is a very rich, centrally-concentrated cluster detached from the surrounding star field. It has more than 100 stars that range significantly in brightness.[37] The brightest cluster stars are mostly blue supergiants, though the cluster contains at least one red supergiant. Kappa Crucis is a true member of the cluster that bears its name, and is one of the brighter stars at magnitude 5.9.[3]

Cultural significance edit

The most prominent feature of Crux is the distinctive asterism known as the Southern Cross. It has great significance in the cultures of the southern hemisphere, particularly of Australia, Brazil, Chile and New Zealand.[38]

Flags and symbols edit

 
Crux, appearing on a number of flags and insignia

Several southern countries and organisations have traditionally used Crux as a national or distinctive symbol. The four or five brightest stars of Crux appear, heraldically standardised in various ways, on the flags of Australia, Brazil, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea and Samoa. They also appear on the flags of the Australian state of Victoria, the Australian Capital Territory, the Northern Territory, as well as the flag of Magallanes Region of Chile, the flag of Londrina (Brazil) and several Argentine provincial flags and emblems (for example, Tierra del Fuego and Santa Cruz). The flag of the Mercosur trading zone displays the four brightest stars. Crux also appears on the Brazilian coat of arms and, as of July 2015, on the cover of Brazilian passports.

Five stars appear in the logo of the Brazilian football team Cruzeiro Esporte Clube and in the insignia of the Order of the Southern Cross, and the cross has featured as name of the Brazilian currency (the cruzeiro from 1942 to 1986 and again from 1990 to 1994). All coins of the current (1998) series of the Brazilian real display the constellation.

 
Brazil's National Order of the Southern Cross

Songs and literature reference the Southern Cross, including the Argentine epic poem Martín Fierro. The Argentinian singer Charly García says that he is "from the Southern Cross" in the song "No voy en tren".

The Cross gets a mention in the lyrics of the Brazilian National Anthem (1909): "A imagem do Cruzeiro resplandece" ("the image of the Cross shines").

The Southern Cross is mentioned in the Australian National Anthem, "Beneath our radiant Southern Cross we'll toil with hearts and hands"

The Southern Cross features in the coat of arms of William Birdwood, 1st Baron Birdwood, the British officer who commanded the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps during the Gallipoli Campaign of the First World War.

The Southern Cross is also mentioned in the Samoan National Anthem. "Vaai 'i na fetu o lo'u a agiagia ai: Le faailoga lea o Iesu, na maliu ai mo Samoa." ("Look at those stars that are waving on it: This is the symbol of Jesus, who died on it for Samoa.")

The 1952-53 NBC Television Series Victory At Sea contained a musical number entitled "Beneath the Southern Cross".

"Southern Cross" is a single released by Crosby, Stills and Nash in 1981. It reached #18 on Billboard Hot 100 in late 1982.

"The Sign of the Southern Cross" is a song released by Black Sabbath in 1981. The song was released on the album "Mob Rules".

The Order of the Southern Cross is a Brazilian order of chivalry awarded to "those who have rendered significant service to the Brazilian nation".

In "O Sweet Saint Martin's Land", the lyrics mention the Southern Cross: Thy Southern Cross the night.

A stylized version of Crux appears on the Australian Eureka Flag. The constellation was also used on the dark blue, shield-like patch worn by personnel of the U.S. Army's Americal Division, which was organized in the Southern Hemisphere, on the island of New Caledonia, and also on the blue diamond of the U.S. 1st Marine Division, which fought on the Southern Hemisphere islands of Guadalcanal and New Britain.

The Petersflagge flag of the German East Africa Company of 1885–1920, which included a constellation of five white five-pointed Crux "stars" on a red ground, later served as the model for symbolism associated with generic German colonial-oriented organisations: the Reichskolonialbund of 1936–1943 and the Friends of the former German Protectorates [de] (1956/1983 to the present).

Southern Cross station is a major rail terminal in Melbourne, Australia.[39]

The Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of the Southern Cross is a personal ordinariate of the Roman Catholic Church primarily within the territory of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference for groups of Anglicans who desire full communion with the Catholic Church in Australia and Asia.

The Knights of the Southern Cross (KSC) is a Catholic fraternal order throughout Australia.

Various cultures edit

In India, there is a story related to the creation of Trishanku Swarga (त्रिशंकु), meaning Cross (Crux), created by Sage Vishwamitra.[40]

In Chinese, 十字架 (Shí Zì Jià), meaning Cross, refers to an asterism consisting of γ Crucis, α Crucis, β Crucis and δ Crucis.[41]

In Australian Aboriginal astronomy, Crux and the Coalsack mark the head of the 'Emu in the Sky' (which is seen in the dark spaces rather than in the patterns of stars) in several Aboriginal cultures,[42] while Crux itself is said to be a possum sitting in a tree (Boorong people of the Wimmera region of northwestern Victoria), a representation of the sky deity Mirrabooka (Quandamooka people of Stradbroke Island), a stingray (Yolngu people of Arnhem Land), or an eagle (Kaurna people of the Adelaide Plains).[43] Two Pacific constellations also included Gamma Centauri. Torres Strait Islanders in modern-day Australia saw Gamma Centauri as the handle and the four stars as the left hand of Tagai, and the stars of Musca as the trident of the fishing spear he is holding. In Aranda traditions of central Australia, the four Cross stars are the talon of an eagle and Gamma Centauri as its leg.[44]

Various peoples in the East Indies and Brazil viewed the four main stars as the body of a ray.[44] In both Indonesia and Malaysia, it is known as Bintang Pari and Buruj Pari,[45] respectively ("ray stars"). This aquatic theme is also shared by an archaic name of the constellation in Vietnam, where it was once known as sao Cá Liệt (the ponyfish star).[46]

Among Filipino people, the southern cross have various names pertaining to tops, including kasing (Visayan languages), paglong (Bikol), and pasil (Tagalog). It is also called butiti (puffer fish) in Waray.[47]

The Javanese people of Indonesia called this constellation Gubug pèncèng ("raking hut") or lumbung ("the granary"), because the shape of the constellation was like that of a raking hut.[48]

The Southern Cross (α, β, γ and δ Crucis) together with μ Crucis is one of the asterisms used by Bugis sailors for navigation, called bintoéng bola képpang, meaning "incomplete house star"[49]

The Māori name for the Southern Cross is Māhutonga and it is thought of as the anchor (Te Punga) of Tama-rereti's waka (the Milky Way), while the Pointers are its rope.[50] In Tonga it is known as Toloa ("duck"); it is depicted as a duck flying south, with one of his wings (δ Crucis) wounded because Ongo tangata ("two men", α and β Centauri) threw a stone at it. The Coalsack is known as Humu (the "triggerfish"), because of its shape.[51] In Samoa the constellation is called Sumu ("triggerfish") because of its rhomboid shape, while α and β Centauri are called Luatagata (Two Men), just as they are in Tonga. The peoples of the Solomon Islands saw several figures in the Southern Cross. These included a knee protector and a net used to catch Palolo worms. Neighboring peoples in the Marshall Islands saw these stars as a fish.[44] Peninsular Malays also see the likeness of a fish in the Crux, particularly the Scomberomorus or its local name Tohok.[45]

In Mapudungun, the language of Patagonian Mapuches, the name of the Southern Cross is Melipal, which means "four stars". In Quechua, the language of the Inca civilization, Crux is known as "Chakana", which means literally "stair" (chaka, bridge, link; hanan, high, above), but carries a deep symbolism within Quechua mysticism.[52] Alpha and Beta Crucis make up one foot of the Great Rhea, a constellation encompassing Centaurus and Circinus along with the two bright stars. The Great Rhea was a constellation of the Bororo of Brazil. The Mocoví people of Argentina also saw a rhea including the stars of Crux. Their rhea is attacked by two dogs, represented by bright stars in Centaurus and Circinus. The dogs' heads are marked by Alpha and Beta Centauri. The rhea's body is marked by the four main stars of Crux, while its head is Gamma Centauri and its feet are the bright stars of Musca.[53] The Bakairi people of Brazil had a sprawling constellation representing a bird snare. It included the bright stars of Crux, the southern part of Centaurus, Circinus, at least one star in Lupus, the bright stars of Musca, Beta and the optical double star Delta1,2 Chamaeleontis: and some of the stars of Volans, and Mensa.[54] The Kalapalo people of Mato Grosso state in Brazil saw the stars of Crux as Aganagi angry bees having emerged from the Coalsack, which they saw as the beehive.[55]

Among Tuaregs, the four most visible stars of Crux are considered iggaren, i.e. four Maerua crassifolia trees.[56][57][58][59] The Tswana people of Botswana saw the constellation as Dithutlwa, two giraffes – Alpha and Beta Crucis forming a male, and Gamma and Delta forming the female.[60]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ João Faras was an astronomer and physician of King Manuel I of Portugal who accompanied Pedro Álvares Cabral in the discovery of Brazil in 1500
  2. ^ While parts of the constellation technically rise above the horizon to observers between 25°N and 34°N, stars within a few degrees of the horizon are to all intents and purposes unobservable.[18]
  3. ^ Objects of magnitude 6.5 are among the faintest visible to the unaided eye in suburban-rural transition night skies.[22]

References edit

Citations
  1. ^ Pasachoff, J. M.; Menzel, D. H.; Tirion, W. (1992). R. T. Petarson (ed.). A Field Guide to the Stars and Planets. The Peterson Field Guide Series. Vol. 15 (3 ed.). New York: Houghton Mifflin Company. p. 144. ISBN 0395537649.
  2. ^ a b Staal 1988, p. 247.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Ridpath & Tirion 2017, pp. 134–135.
  4. ^ Dante, Purgatorio, Canto I, lines 22-27, Hollander translation
    "I turned to the right and, fixing my attention
    on the other pole, I saw four stars
    not seen but by those first on earth.
    The very sky seemed to rejoice
    in their bright glittering. O widowed
    region of the north, denied that sight!"
  5. ^ Walker, J. J. (22 December 1881). "Dante and the Southern Cross". Nature. 25 (636): 173. doi:10.1038/025217b0. S2CID 4064727.
  6. ^ Dante Alighieri (2003-05-27). The Divine Comedy. Penguin. ISBN 9781101117996.
  7. ^ Cadamosto, A. (c. 1465). Navigatione (1550 Ramusio ed.). p. 116r. We likewise observed ... due south by compass, a constellation of six large bright stars, in the figure of a cross in this form ... we conjectured this to be the southern chariot, but could not expect to observe the principal star, as we had not yet lost sight of the north pole.Cadamosto, A. (c. 1465). Navigatione (1811 Kerr ed.). p. 244.. However, no manuscript of Cadamosto's notebook has survived, only the printed version, and the errors in the diagram may be due to the printer's decision.
  8. ^ Dekker, Elly (1990). Annals of Science. Vol. 47. pp. 530–533.
  9. ^ Revista do Instituto Histórico e Geográfico Brasileiro. Vol. V. Rio de Janeiro. 1843.
  10. ^ Dekker, Elly (1990). Annals of Science. Vol. 47. pp. 533–535.
  11. ^ Dekker, Elly (1990). Annals of Science. Vol. 47. pp. 535–543.
  12. ^ Dekker, Elly (1990). Annals of Science. Vol. 47. pp. 545–548.
  13. ^ "Letter to Giuliano de Medici". State Library of New South Wales. c. 1516. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
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  15. ^ a b c d Bagnall, Philip M. (2012). The Star Atlas Companion: What You Need to Know about the Constellations. New York, New York: Springer. pp. 183–87. ISBN 978-1-4614-0830-7.
  16. ^ Russell, Henry Norris (1922). "The New International Symbols for the Constellations". Popular Astronomy. 30: 469. Bibcode:1922PA.....30..469R.
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  18. ^ a b c Ian Ridpath. "Constellations: Andromeda–Indus". Star Tales. self-published. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  19. ^ Pasachoff, Jay M (2000). Field Guide to the Stars and Planets. Houghton Mifflin. p. 67. ISBN 978-0-395-93431-9.
  20. ^ "Ian Ridpath.com: Constellations". Retrieved 2015-09-29.
  21. ^ a b Grainger, DH (1969). Don't die in the Bundu (8th ed.). Cape Town. pp. 84–86. ISBN 0-86978-056-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
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  24. ^ Rizzuto, Aaron; Ireland, Michael; Robertson, J. G. (October 2011), "Multidimensional Bayesian membership analysis of the Sco OB2 moving group", Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 416 (4): 3108–3117, arXiv:1106.2857, Bibcode:2011MNRAS.416.3108R, doi:10.1111/j.1365-2966.2011.19256.x, S2CID 54510608.
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  27. ^ de Zeeuw, P.T.; Hoogerwerf, R.; de Bruijne, J.H.J.; Brown, A.G.A.; Blaauw, A. (1999). "A Hipparcos Census of Nearby OB Associations". Astronomical Journal. 117 (1): 354–99. arXiv:astro-ph/9809227. Bibcode:1999AJ....117..354D. doi:10.1086/300682. S2CID 16098861.
  28. ^ Watson, Christopher (4 January 2010). "BG Crucis". AAVSO Website. American Association of Variable Star Observers. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
  29. ^ Watson, Christopher (4 January 2010). "T Crucis". AAVSO Website. American Association of Variable Star Observers. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
  30. ^ Watson, Christopher (4 January 2010). "S Crucis". AAVSO Website. American Association of Variable Star Observers. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
  31. ^ Watson, Christopher (4 January 2010). "R Crucis". AAVSO Website. American Association of Variable Star Observers. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
  32. ^ Otero, Sebastian (6 January 2011). "BH Crucis". AAVSO Website. American Association of Variable Star Observers. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  33. ^ Walker, W.S.G. (2009). "BH Crucis : Period, Magnitude, and Color Changes". J. Am. Assoc. Variable Star Obs. 37 (2): 87–95. Bibcode:2009JAVSO..37...87W.
  34. ^ Bailey, Vanessa; et al. (January 2014). "HD 106906 b: A planetary-mass companion outside a massive debris disk". The Astrophysical Journal Letters. 780 (1): L4. arXiv:1312.1265. Bibcode:2014ApJ...780L...4B. doi:10.1088/2041-8205/780/1/L4. S2CID 119113709.
  35. ^ Franco, G.P.A. (2000). "Interstellar Na I D lines towards the Southern Coalsack". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 315 (3): 611–621. Bibcode:2000MNRAS.315..611F. doi:10.1046/j.1365-8711.2000.03434.x.
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  37. ^ Levy 2005, p. 87.
  38. ^ "Story: Southern Cross".
  39. ^ "Southern Cross Railway Station, Victoria – Railway Technology". Railway Technology. Retrieved 2018-04-19.
  40. ^ "Vishwamitra created the parallel universe! PiPa News - PiPa News". 28 May 2022.
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  43. ^ Musgrave, I.: May sky guide: The Eta Aquarid meteor shower, constellations and planets ABC News, 2 May 2016. Retrieved 2 May 2016.
  44. ^ a b c Staal 1988, p. 249.
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  46. ^ Huỳnh, Tịnh Của (1895). Đại Nam quấc âm tự vị [Dictionnaire annamite] (in Vietnamese). Nam tào: "tên sao chòm ở phía nam, cũng là sao cá liệt" ... – " the name of a constellation in the south, also known as the ponyfish star."
  47. ^ Mintz, Malcolm W. (2021). "Monograph 1: The Philippines at the Turn of the Sixteenth Century". Intersections: Gender and Sexuality in Asia and the Pacific.
  48. ^ Daldjoeni, N. (1984). "Pranatamangsa, the javanese agricultural calendar – Its bioclimatological and sociocultural function in developing rural life". The Environmentalist. 4 (S7): 15–18. Bibcode:1984ThEnv...4S..15D. doi:10.1007/BF01907286. S2CID 189914684.
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Sources
  • Levy, David H. (2005), Deep Sky Objects, Prometheus Books, ISBN 1-59102-361-0
  • Pasachoff, Jay M. (2006), A Field Guide to the Stars and Planets, Houghton Mifflin
  • Ridpath, Ian; Tirion, Wil (2017), Stars and Planets Guide, Princeton University Press, ISBN 9780691177885
  • Staal, Julius D. W. (1988), The New Patterns in the Sky: Myths and Legends of the Stars, McDonald and Woodward Publishing Company, ISBN 0939923041
  • Velt, Kik (1990), Stars Over Tonga, 'Atenisi University

External links edit

  • Finding the South Pole in the sky
  • The clickable Crux
  • in Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand
  • Andrea Corsali – Letter to Giuliano de Medici, 1516 showing the Southern Cross at the State Library of NSW
  • Letter of Andrea Corsali 1516–1989: with additional material ("the first description and illustration of the Southern Cross, with speculations about Australia ...") digitised by the National Library of Australia.
  • ‘The Southern Cross’: A Poem by Adam Sedia

crux, other, uses, disambiguation, southern, cross, redirects, here, other, uses, southern, cross, disambiguation, constellation, southern, that, centred, four, bright, stars, cross, shaped, asterism, commonly, known, southern, cross, lies, southern, milky, vi. For other uses see Crux disambiguation Southern Cross redirects here For other uses see Southern Cross disambiguation Crux k r ʌ k s is a constellation of the southern sky that is centred on four bright stars in a cross shaped asterism commonly known as the Southern Cross It lies on the southern end of the Milky Way s visible band The name Crux is Latin for cross Even though it is the smallest of all 88 modern constellations Crux is among the most easily distinguished as its four main stars each have an apparent visual magnitude brighter than 2 8 It has attained a high level of cultural significance in many Southern Hemisphere states and nations CruxConstellationList of stars in CruxAbbreviationCruGenitiveCrucisPronunciation k r ʌ k s genitive ˈ k r uː s ɪ s SymbolismSouthern CrossRight ascension12 5hDeclination 60 QuadrantSQ3Area68 sq deg 88th Main stars4Bayer Flamsteedstars19Stars with planets2Stars brighter than 3 00m5Stars within 10 00 pc 32 62 ly 0Brightest starAcrux a Cru 0 87m Messier objects0Meteor showersCrucidsBorderingconstellationsCentaurusMuscaVisible at latitudes between 20 and 90 Best visible at 21 00 9 p m during the month of May Blue white a Crucis Acrux is the most southerly member of the constellation and at magnitude 0 8 the brightest The three other stars of the cross appear clockwise and in order of lessening magnitude b Crucis Mimosa g Crucis Gacrux and d Crucis Imai e Crucis Ginan also lies within the cross asterism Many of these brighter stars are members of the Scorpius Centaurus association a large but loose group of hot blue white stars that appear to share common origins and motion across the southern Milky Way Crux contains four Cepheid variables each visible to the naked eye under optimum conditions Crux also contains the bright and colourful open cluster known as the Jewel Box NGC 4755 on its eastern border Nearby to the southeast is a large dark nebula spanning 7 by 5 known as the Coalsack Nebula portions of which are mapped in the neighbouring constellations of Centaurus and Musca Contents 1 History 2 Characteristics 3 Visibility 3 1 Use in navigation 3 2 Bright stars 4 Features 4 1 Stars 4 2 Scorpius Centaurus association 4 3 Variable stars 4 4 Host star exoplanets in Crux 4 5 Objects beyond the Local Arm 5 Cultural significance 5 1 Flags and symbols 5 2 Various cultures 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksHistory editThe bright stars in Crux were known to the Ancient Greeks where Ptolemy regarded them as part of the constellation Centaurus 1 2 They were entirely visible as far north as Britain in the fourth millennium BC However the precession of the equinoxes gradually lowered the stars below the European horizon and they were eventually forgotten by the inhabitants of northern latitudes 3 By 400 AD the stars in the constellation now called Crux never rose above the horizon throughout most of Europe Dante may have known about the constellation in the 14th century as he describes an asterism of four bright stars in the southern sky in his Divine Comedy 4 5 His description however may be allegorical and the similarity to the constellation a coincidence 6 nbsp Depiction of the Crux by Joao Faras in May 1500The 15th century Venetian navigator Alvise Cadamosto made note of what was probably the Southern Cross on exiting the Gambia River in 1455 calling it the carro dell ostro southern chariot However Cadamosto s accompanying diagram was inaccurate 7 8 Historians generally credit Joao Faras a for being the first European to depict it correctly Faras sketched and described the constellation calling it las guardas in a letter written on the beaches of Brazil on 1 May 1500 to the Portuguese monarch 9 10 Explorer Amerigo Vespucci seems to have observed not only the Southern Cross but also the neighboring Coalsack Nebula on his second voyage in 1501 1502 11 Another early modern description clearly describing Crux as a separate constellation is attributed to Andrea Corsali an Italian navigator who from 1515 1517 sailed to China and the East Indies in an expedition sponsored by King Manuel I In 1516 Corsali wrote a letter to the monarch describing his observations of the southern sky which included a rather crude map of the stars around the south celestial pole including the Southern Cross and the two Magellanic Clouds seen in an external orientation as on a globe 12 13 Emery Molyneux and Petrus Plancius have also been cited as the first uranographers sky mappers to distinguish Crux as a separate constellation their representations date from 1592 the former depicting it on his celestial globe and the latter in one of the small celestial maps on his large wall map Both authors however depended on unreliable sources and placed Crux in the wrong position Crux was first shown in its correct position on the celestial globes of Petrus Plancius and Jodocus Hondius in 1598 and 1600 Its stars were first catalogued separately from Centaurus by Frederick de Houtman in 1603 14 The constellation was later adopted by Jakob Bartsch in 1624 and Augustin Royer in 1679 Royer is sometimes wrongly cited as initially distinguishing Crux 2 Characteristics edit nbsp Southern Cross from New ZealandCrux is bordered by the constellations Centaurus which surrounds it on three sides on the east north and west and Musca to the south Covering 68 square degrees and 0 165 of the night sky it is the smallest of the 88 constellations 15 The three letter abbreviation for the constellation as adopted by the International Astronomical Union in 1922 is Cru 16 The official constellation boundaries as set by Belgian astronomer Eugene Delporte in 1930 are defined by a polygon of four segments In the equatorial coordinate system the right ascension coordinates of these borders lie between 11h 56 13m and 12h 57 45m while the declination coordinates are between 55 68 and 64 70 17 Its totality figures at least part of the year south of the 25th parallel north 18 b In tropical regions Crux can be seen in the sky from April to June Crux is exactly opposite to Cassiopeia on the celestial sphere and therefore it cannot appear in the sky with the latter at the same time In this era south of Cape Town Adelaide and Buenos Aires the 34th parallel south Crux is circumpolar and thus always appears in the sky Crux is sometimes confused with the nearby False Cross asterism by stargazers The False Cross consists of stars in Carina and Vela is larger and dimmer does not have a fifth star and lacks the two prominent nearby Pointer Stars Between the two is the even larger and dimmer Diamond Cross Visibility edit nbsp Deep exposure of Crux Coalsack Nebula and IC 2944Crux is easily visible from the southern hemisphere south of 35th parallel at practically any time of year as circumpolar It is also visible near the horizon from tropical latitudes of the northern hemisphere for a few hours every night during the northern winter and spring For instance it is visible from Cancun or any other place at latitude 25 N or less at around 10 pm at the end of April 19 20 There are 5 main stars Due to precession Crux will move closer to the South Pole in the next millennia up to 67 degrees south declination for the middle of the constellation However by the year 14 000 Crux will be visible for most parts of Europe and continental United States which will extend to North Europe by the year 18 000 as it will be less than 30 degrees south declination Use in navigation edit nbsp Locating the south celestial poleIn the Southern Hemisphere the Southern Cross is frequently used for navigation in much the same way that Polaris is used in the Northern Hemisphere Projecting a line from g to a Crucis the foot of the crucifix approximately 4 1 2 times beyond gives a point close to the Southern Celestial Pole 3 which is also coincidentally where intersects a perpendicular line taken southwards from the east west axis of Alpha Centauri to Beta Centauri which are stars at an alike declination to Crux and of a similar width as the cross but higher magnitude 21 Argentine gauchos are documented as using Crux for night orientation in the Pampas and Patagonia Alpha and Beta Centauri are of similar declinations thus distance from the pole and are often referred as the Southern Pointers or just The Pointers allowing people to easily identify the Southern Cross the constellation of Crux Very few bright stars lie between Crux and the pole itself although the constellation Musca is fairly easily recognised immediately south of Crux 21 Bright stars edit Down to apparent magnitude 2 5 are 92 stars that shine the brightest as viewed from the Earth Three of these stars are in Crux making it the most densely populated as to those stars this being 3 26 of these 92 stars and in turn being 19 2 times more than the expected 0 17 that would result on a homogenous distribution of all bright stars and a randomised drawing of all 88 constellations given its area 0 17 of the sky Features editStars edit Further information List of stars in Crux nbsp The constellation Crux as it can be seen by the naked eye nbsp Crux with clouds from Cape TownWithin the constellation s borders there are 49 stars brighter than or equal to apparent magnitude 6 5 c 18 The four main stars that form the asterism are Alpha Beta Gamma and Delta Crucis a Crucis or Acrux is a triple star 321 light years from Earth A rich blue in colour with a visual magnitude 0 8 to the unaided eye it has two close components of a similar magnitude 1 3 and 1 8 respectively plus another much wider component of the 5th magnitude The two close components are resolved in a small amateur telescope and the wide component is readily visible in a pair of binoculars b Crucis or Mimosa is a blue hued giant star of magnitude 1 3 and lies 353 light years from Earth It is a Beta Cephei type variable star with a variation of less than 0 1 magnitudes 3 g Crucis or Gacrux is an optical double star The primary is a red hued giant star of magnitude 1 6 88 light years from Earth and is one of the closest red giants to Earth Its secondary component is magnitude 6 5 264 light years from Earth d Crucis Imai is a magnitude 2 8 blue white hued star about 345 light years from Earth 3 Like Mimosa it is a Beta Cepheid variable 15 There is also a fifth star that is often included with the Southern Cross e Crucis Ginan is an orange hued giant star of magnitude 3 6 228 light years from Earth There are several other naked eye stars within the borders of Crux especially Iota Crucis is a visual double star 125 light years from Earth The primary is an orange hued giant of magnitude 4 6 and the secondary at magnitude 9 5 Mu Crucis or Mu1 2 Crucis is a wide double star where the components are about 370 light years from Earth Equally blue white in colour the components are magnitude 4 0 and 5 1 respectively and are easily divisible in small amateur telescopes or large binoculars 3 Scorpius Centaurus association edit Unusually a total of 15 of the 23 brightest stars in Crux are spectrally blue white B type stars 15 Among the five main bright stars Delta and probably Alpha and Beta are likely co moving B type members of the Scorpius Centaurus association the nearest OB association to the Sun 23 24 They are among the highest mass stellar members of the Lower Centaurus Crux subgroup of the association with ages of roughly 10 to 20 million years 25 26 Other members include the blue white stars Zeta Lambda and both the components of the visual double star Mu 27 Variable stars edit Crux contains many variable stars It boasts four Cepheid variables that may all reach naked eye visibility BG Crucis ranges from magnitude 5 34 to 5 58 over 3 3428 days 28 T Crucis ranges from 6 32 to 6 83 over 6 73331 days 29 S Crucis ranges from 6 22 to 6 92 over 4 68997 days 30 R Crucis ranges from 6 4 to 7 23 over 5 82575 days 31 Other well studied variable stars includes Lambda Crucis and Theta2 Crucis that are both Beta Cepheid type variable stars 15 BH Crucis also known as Welch s Red Variable is a Mira variable that ranges from magnitude 6 6 to 9 8 over 530 days 32 Discovered in October 1969 it has become redder and brighter mean magnitude changing from 8 047 to 7 762 and its period lengthened by 25 in the first thirty years since its discovery 33 Host star exoplanets in Crux edit The star HD 106906 has been found to have a planet HD 106906 b that has one of the widest orbits of any currently known planetary mass companions 34 Objects beyond the Local Arm edit Crux is backlit by the multitude of stars of the Scutum Crux Arm more commonly called the Scutum Centaurus Arm of the Milky Way This is the main inner arm in the local radial quarter of the galaxy Part obscuring this is The Coalsack Nebula lies partially within Crux and partly in the neighboring constellations of Musca and Centaurus 3 It is the most prominent dark nebula in the skies and is easily visible to the naked eye as a prominent dark patch in the southern Milky Way It can be found 6 5 southeast from the centre of Crux or 3 east from a Crucis Its large area covers about 7 by 5 and is 180 parsecs 590 ly away from Earth 35 A key feature of the Scutum Crux Arm is The Jewel Box k Crucis Cluster or NGC 4755 is a small but bright open cluster that appears as a fuzzy star to the naked eye and is very close to the easternmost boundary of Crux about 1 southeast of Beta Crucis The combined or total magnitude is 4 2 and it lies at a distance of 1 95 kiloparsecs 6 400 ly from Earth 3 The cluster was given its name by John Herschel 3 based on the range of colours visible throughout the star cluster in his telescope About seven million years old 36 it is one of the youngest open clusters in the Milky Way and it appears to have the shape of a letter A The Jewel Box Cluster is classified as Shapley class g and Trumpler class I 3 r cluster it is a very rich centrally concentrated cluster detached from the surrounding star field It has more than 100 stars that range significantly in brightness 37 The brightest cluster stars are mostly blue supergiants though the cluster contains at least one red supergiant Kappa Crucis is a true member of the cluster that bears its name and is one of the brighter stars at magnitude 5 9 3 Cultural significance editThe most prominent feature of Crux is the distinctive asterism known as the Southern Cross It has great significance in the cultures of the southern hemisphere particularly of Australia Brazil Chile and New Zealand 38 Flags and symbols edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Further information Flags depicting the Southern Cross nbsp Crux appearing on a number of flags and insigniaSeveral southern countries and organisations have traditionally used Crux as a national or distinctive symbol The four or five brightest stars of Crux appear heraldically standardised in various ways on the flags of Australia Brazil New Zealand Papua New Guinea and Samoa They also appear on the flags of the Australian state of Victoria the Australian Capital Territory the Northern Territory as well as the flag of Magallanes Region of Chile the flag of Londrina Brazil and several Argentine provincial flags and emblems for example Tierra del Fuego and Santa Cruz The flag of the Mercosur trading zone displays the four brightest stars Crux also appears on the Brazilian coat of arms and as of July 2015 update on the cover of Brazilian passports Five stars appear in the logo of the Brazilian football team Cruzeiro Esporte Clube and in the insignia of the Order of the Southern Cross and the cross has featured as name of the Brazilian currency the cruzeiro from 1942 to 1986 and again from 1990 to 1994 All coins of the current update 1998 series of the Brazilian real display the constellation nbsp Brazil s National Order of the Southern CrossSongs and literature reference the Southern Cross including the Argentine epic poem Martin Fierro The Argentinian singer Charly Garcia says that he is from the Southern Cross in the song No voy en tren The Cross gets a mention in the lyrics of the Brazilian National Anthem 1909 A imagem do Cruzeiro resplandece the image of the Cross shines The Southern Cross is mentioned in the Australian National Anthem Beneath our radiant Southern Cross we ll toil with hearts and hands The Southern Cross features in the coat of arms of William Birdwood 1st Baron Birdwood the British officer who commanded the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps during the Gallipoli Campaign of the First World War The Southern Cross is also mentioned in the Samoan National Anthem Vaai i na fetu o lo u a agiagia ai Le faailoga lea o Iesu na maliu ai mo Samoa Look at those stars that are waving on it This is the symbol of Jesus who died on it for Samoa The 1952 53 NBC Television Series Victory At Sea contained a musical number entitled Beneath the Southern Cross Southern Cross is a single released by Crosby Stills and Nash in 1981 It reached 18 on Billboard Hot 100 in late 1982 The Sign of the Southern Cross is a song released by Black Sabbath in 1981 The song was released on the album Mob Rules The Order of the Southern Cross is a Brazilian order of chivalry awarded to those who have rendered significant service to the Brazilian nation In O Sweet Saint Martin s Land the lyrics mention the Southern Cross Thy Southern Cross the night A stylized version of Crux appears on the Australian Eureka Flag The constellation was also used on the dark blue shield like patch worn by personnel of the U S Army s Americal Division which was organized in the Southern Hemisphere on the island of New Caledonia and also on the blue diamond of the U S 1st Marine Division which fought on the Southern Hemisphere islands of Guadalcanal and New Britain The Petersflagge flag of the German East Africa Company of 1885 1920 which included a constellation of five white five pointed Crux stars on a red ground later served as the model for symbolism associated with generic German colonial oriented organisations the Reichskolonialbund of 1936 1943 and the Friends of the former German Protectorates de 1956 1983 to the present Southern Cross station is a major rail terminal in Melbourne Australia 39 The Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of the Southern Cross is a personal ordinariate of the Roman Catholic Church primarily within the territory of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference for groups of Anglicans who desire full communion with the Catholic Church in Australia and Asia The Knights of the Southern Cross KSC is a Catholic fraternal order throughout Australia Various cultures edit In India there is a story related to the creation of Trishanku Swarga त र श क meaning Cross Crux created by Sage Vishwamitra 40 In Chinese 十字架 Shi Zi Jia meaning Cross refers to an asterism consisting of g Crucis a Crucis b Crucis and d Crucis 41 In Australian Aboriginal astronomy Crux and the Coalsack mark the head of the Emu in the Sky which is seen in the dark spaces rather than in the patterns of stars in several Aboriginal cultures 42 while Crux itself is said to be a possum sitting in a tree Boorong people of the Wimmera region of northwestern Victoria a representation of the sky deity Mirrabooka Quandamooka people of Stradbroke Island a stingray Yolngu people of Arnhem Land or an eagle Kaurna people of the Adelaide Plains 43 Two Pacific constellations also included Gamma Centauri Torres Strait Islanders in modern day Australia saw Gamma Centauri as the handle and the four stars as the left hand of Tagai and the stars of Musca as the trident of the fishing spear he is holding In Aranda traditions of central Australia the four Cross stars are the talon of an eagle and Gamma Centauri as its leg 44 Various peoples in the East Indies and Brazil viewed the four main stars as the body of a ray 44 In both Indonesia and Malaysia it is known as Bintang Pari and Buruj Pari 45 respectively ray stars This aquatic theme is also shared by an archaic name of the constellation in Vietnam where it was once known as sao Ca Liệt the ponyfish star 46 Among Filipino people the southern cross have various names pertaining to tops including kasing Visayan languages paglong Bikol and pasil Tagalog It is also called butiti puffer fish in Waray 47 The Javanese people of Indonesia called this constellation Gubug penceng raking hut or lumbung the granary because the shape of the constellation was like that of a raking hut 48 The Southern Cross a b g and d Crucis together with m Crucis is one of the asterisms used by Bugis sailors for navigation called bintoeng bola keppang meaning incomplete house star 49 The Maori name for the Southern Cross is Mahutonga and it is thought of as the anchor Te Punga of Tama rereti s waka the Milky Way while the Pointers are its rope 50 In Tonga it is known as Toloa duck it is depicted as a duck flying south with one of his wings d Crucis wounded because Ongo tangata two men a and b Centauri threw a stone at it The Coalsack is known as Humu the triggerfish because of its shape 51 In Samoa the constellation is called Sumu triggerfish because of its rhomboid shape while a and b Centauri are called Luatagata Two Men just as they are in Tonga The peoples of the Solomon Islands saw several figures in the Southern Cross These included a knee protector and a net used to catch Palolo worms Neighboring peoples in the Marshall Islands saw these stars as a fish 44 Peninsular Malays also see the likeness of a fish in the Crux particularly the Scomberomorus or its local name Tohok 45 In Mapudungun the language of Patagonian Mapuches the name of the Southern Cross is Melipal which means four stars In Quechua the language of the Inca civilization Crux is known as Chakana which means literally stair chaka bridge link hanan high above but carries a deep symbolism within Quechua mysticism 52 Alpha and Beta Crucis make up one foot of the Great Rhea a constellation encompassing Centaurus and Circinus along with the two bright stars The Great Rhea was a constellation of the Bororo of Brazil The Mocovi people of Argentina also saw a rhea including the stars of Crux Their rhea is attacked by two dogs represented by bright stars in Centaurus and Circinus The dogs heads are marked by Alpha and Beta Centauri The rhea s body is marked by the four main stars of Crux while its head is Gamma Centauri and its feet are the bright stars of Musca 53 The Bakairi people of Brazil had a sprawling constellation representing a bird snare It included the bright stars of Crux the southern part of Centaurus Circinus at least one star in Lupus the bright stars of Musca Beta and the optical double star Delta1 2 Chamaeleontis and some of the stars of Volans and Mensa 54 The Kalapalo people of Mato Grosso state in Brazil saw the stars of Crux as Aganagi angry bees having emerged from the Coalsack which they saw as the beehive 55 Among Tuaregs the four most visible stars of Crux are considered iggaren i e four Maerua crassifolia trees 56 57 58 59 The Tswana people of Botswana saw the constellation as Dithutlwa two giraffes Alpha and Beta Crucis forming a male and Gamma and Delta forming the female 60 See also editTrishanku Crux Chinese astronomy Notes edit Joao Faras was an astronomer and physician of King Manuel I of Portugal who accompanied Pedro Alvares Cabral in the discovery of Brazil in 1500 While parts of the constellation technically rise above the horizon to observers between 25 N and 34 N stars within a few degrees of the horizon are to all intents and purposes unobservable 18 Objects of magnitude 6 5 are among the faintest visible to the unaided eye in suburban rural transition night skies 22 References editCitations Pasachoff J M Menzel D H Tirion W 1992 R T Petarson ed A Field Guide to the Stars and Planets The Peterson Field Guide Series Vol 15 3 ed New York Houghton Mifflin Company p 144 ISBN 0395537649 a b Staal 1988 p 247 a b c d e f g h i Ridpath amp Tirion 2017 pp 134 135 Dante Purgatorio Canto I lines 22 27 Hollander translation I turned to the right and fixing my attention on the other pole I saw four stars not seen but by those first on earth The very sky seemed to rejoice in their bright glittering O widowed region of the north denied that sight dd Walker J J 22 December 1881 Dante and the Southern Cross Nature 25 636 173 doi 10 1038 025217b0 S2CID 4064727 Dante Alighieri 2003 05 27 The Divine Comedy Penguin ISBN 9781101117996 Cadamosto A c 1465 Navigatione 1550 Ramusio ed p 116r We likewise observed due south by compass a constellation of six large bright stars in the figure of a cross in this form we conjectured this to be the southern chariot but could not expect to observe the principal star as we had not yet lost sight of the north pole Cadamosto A c 1465 Navigatione 1811 Kerr ed p 244 However no manuscript of Cadamosto s notebook has survived only the printed version and the errors in the diagram may be due to the printer s decision Dekker Elly 1990 Annals of Science Vol 47 pp 530 533 Revista do Instituto Historico e Geografico Brasileiro Vol V Rio de Janeiro 1843 Dekker Elly 1990 Annals of Science Vol 47 pp 533 535 Dekker Elly 1990 Annals of Science Vol 47 pp 535 543 Dekker Elly 1990 Annals of Science Vol 47 pp 545 548 Letter to Giuliano de Medici State Library of New South Wales c 1516 Retrieved 1 February 2018 Ian Ridpath s Star Tales Crux Retrieved 5 August 2013 a b c d Bagnall Philip M 2012 The Star Atlas Companion What You Need to Know about the Constellations New York New York Springer pp 183 87 ISBN 978 1 4614 0830 7 Russell Henry Norris 1922 The New International Symbols for the Constellations Popular Astronomy 30 469 Bibcode 1922PA 30 469R Crux Constellation Boundary The Constellations International Astronomical Union Retrieved 23 June 2014 a b c Ian Ridpath Constellations Andromeda Indus Star Tales self published Retrieved 23 June 2014 Pasachoff Jay M 2000 Field Guide to the Stars and Planets Houghton Mifflin p 67 ISBN 978 0 395 93431 9 Ian Ridpath com Constellations Retrieved 2015 09 29 a b Grainger DH 1969 Don t die in the Bundu 8th ed Cape Town pp 84 86 ISBN 0 86978 056 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Bortle John E February 2001 The Bortle Dark Sky Scale Sky amp Telescope Sky Publishing Corporation Archived from the original on 31 March 2014 Retrieved 29 November 2014 Preibisch T Mamajek E 2008 The Nearest OB Association Scorpius Centaurus Sco OB2 Handbook of Star Forming Regions 2 235 arXiv 0809 0407 Bibcode 2008hsf2 book 235P Rizzuto Aaron Ireland Michael Robertson J G October 2011 Multidimensional Bayesian membership analysis of the Sco OB2 moving group Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 416 4 3108 3117 arXiv 1106 2857 Bibcode 2011MNRAS 416 3108R doi 10 1111 j 1365 2966 2011 19256 x S2CID 54510608 de Geus E J de Zeeuw P T amp Lub J 1989 Physical Parameters of Stars in the Scorpio Centaurus OB Association Astronomy amp Astrophysics 216 3 44 61 Bibcode 1989A amp A 216 44D Mamajek E E Meyer M R Liebert James 2002 Post T Tauri Stars in the Nearest OB Association Astronomical Journal 124 3 1670 1694 arXiv astro ph 0205417 Bibcode 2002AJ 124 1670M doi 10 1086 341952 S2CID 16855894 de Zeeuw P T Hoogerwerf R de Bruijne J H J Brown A G A Blaauw A 1999 A Hipparcos Census of Nearby OB Associations Astronomical Journal 117 1 354 99 arXiv astro ph 9809227 Bibcode 1999AJ 117 354D doi 10 1086 300682 S2CID 16098861 Watson Christopher 4 January 2010 BG Crucis AAVSO Website American Association of Variable Star Observers Retrieved 12 March 2014 Watson Christopher 4 January 2010 T Crucis AAVSO Website American Association of Variable Star Observers Retrieved 12 March 2014 Watson Christopher 4 January 2010 S Crucis AAVSO Website American Association of Variable Star Observers Retrieved 12 March 2014 Watson Christopher 4 January 2010 R Crucis AAVSO Website American Association of Variable Star Observers Retrieved 12 March 2014 Otero Sebastian 6 January 2011 BH Crucis AAVSO Website American Association of Variable Star Observers Retrieved 23 June 2014 Walker W S G 2009 BH Crucis Period Magnitude and Color Changes J Am Assoc Variable Star Obs 37 2 87 95 Bibcode 2009JAVSO 37 87W Bailey Vanessa et al January 2014 HD 106906 b A planetary mass companion outside a massive debris disk The Astrophysical Journal Letters 780 1 L4 arXiv 1312 1265 Bibcode 2014ApJ 780L 4B doi 10 1088 2041 8205 780 1 L4 S2CID 119113709 Franco G P A 2000 Interstellar Na I D lines towards the Southern Coalsack Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 315 3 611 621 Bibcode 2000MNRAS 315 611F doi 10 1046 j 1365 8711 2000 03434 x WEBDA Open cluster Results for NGC 4755 Retrieved 30 April 2019 Levy 2005 p 87 Story Southern Cross Southern Cross Railway Station Victoria Railway Technology Railway Technology Retrieved 2018 04 19 Vishwamitra created the parallel universe PiPa News PiPa News 28 May 2022 in Chinese 中國星座神話 written by 陳久金 Published by 台灣書房出版有限公司 2005 ISBN 9789867332257 Norris R 2007 The Emu in the Sky Australian Aboriginal Astronomy website Retrieved 2 May 2013 Musgrave I May sky guide The Eta Aquarid meteor shower constellations and planets ABC News 2 May 2016 Retrieved 2 May 2016 a b c Staal 1988 p 249 a b Nurul Fatini Jaafar 2016 Kebudayaan Langit Pribumi Malayonesia Kesturi Akademi Sains Islam Malaysia 26 2 doi 10 13140 RG 2 2 24869 55520 Huỳnh Tịnh Của 1895 Đại Nam quấc am tự vị Dictionnaire annamite in Vietnamese Nam tao ten sao chom ở phia nam cũng la sao ca liệt the name of a constellation in the south also known as the ponyfish star Mintz Malcolm W 2021 Monograph 1 The Philippines at the Turn of the Sixteenth Century Intersections Gender and Sexuality in Asia and the Pacific Daldjoeni N 1984 Pranatamangsa the javanese agricultural calendar Its bioclimatological and sociocultural function in developing rural life The Environmentalist 4 S7 15 18 Bibcode 1984ThEnv 4S 15D doi 10 1007 BF01907286 S2CID 189914684 Kelley David H Milone Eugene F Aveni A F 2011 Exploring Ancient Skies A Survey of Ancient and Cultural Astronomy New York New York Springer p 344 ISBN 978 1 4419 7623 9 Maori Dictionary Waka o Tama rereti Te Retrieved 4 February 2013 Velt 1990 Chakana Inca Cross 23 June 2007 Archived from the original on 4 January 2012 Retrieved 9 July 2012 Staal 1988 p 251 Staal 1988 p 250 Basso Ellen B 1987 In Favor of Deceit A Study of Tricksters in an Amazonian Society Tucson Arizona University of Arizona Press p 360 ISBN 0816510229 southern cross stars iomcottages com Retrieved 2021 02 02 permanent dead link southern cross stars osipssausar in Archived from the original on 2021 02 13 Retrieved 2021 02 02 southern cross stars makeyourhomestandout com Retrieved 2021 02 02 permanent dead link Tselentis Chris 2017 03 22 To the Land of Dreams Crux To the Land of Dreams Retrieved 2021 02 02 Clegg Andrew 1986 Some Aspects of Tswana Cosmology Botswana Notes and Records 18 33 37 JSTOR 40979758 SourcesLevy David H 2005 Deep Sky Objects Prometheus Books ISBN 1 59102 361 0 Pasachoff Jay M 2006 A Field Guide to the Stars and Planets Houghton Mifflin Ridpath Ian Tirion Wil 2017 Stars and Planets Guide Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691177885 Staal Julius D W 1988 The New Patterns in the Sky Myths and Legends of the Stars McDonald and Woodward Publishing Company ISBN 0939923041 Velt Kik 1990 Stars Over Tonga Atenisi UniversityExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Crux category Finding the South Pole in the sky The clickable Crux Southern Cross in Te Ara the Encyclopedia of New Zealand Andrea Corsali Letter to Giuliano de Medici 1516 showing the Southern Cross at the State Library of NSW Letter of Andrea Corsali 1516 1989 with additional material the first description and illustration of the Southern Cross with speculations about Australia digitised by the National Library of Australia The Southern Cross A Poem by Adam Sedia Portals nbsp Astronomy nbsp Stars nbsp Spaceflight nbsp Outer space nbsp Solar System Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Crux amp oldid 1207055682, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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